Aldo Leopold is considered the most important conservationist of the 20th century because his ideas are so relevant to the environmental issues of our time. He is the father of the national wilderness system, wildlife management and the science of ecological restoration. His classic book A Sand County Almanac still inspires us to see the natural world as a community to which we belong.

GREEN FIRE explores Leopold's personal journey of observation and understanding. It reveals how his ideas resonate with people across the entire American landscape, from inner cities to the most remote wild lands. The film challenges viewers to contemplate their own relationship with the land.

GREEN FIRE is the first feature documentary about Aldo Leopold's life and contemporary legacy. It features commentary from conservation leaders including scientists, ranchers, scholars and three of Aldo Leopold's children: Nina, Carl, and Estella. Curt Meine, Leopold's biographer, serves as the on-camera guide, making connections between Leopold's ideas and their expression in the conservation movement today. Peter Coyote gives voice to the Leopold's brilliant writing.

Note about the short version of GREEN FIRE by Steven Dunsky, one of the filmmakers: "The 56-minute (PBS) version contains all of major themes and key points of the 73-minute theatrical release. While the structure remains the same, several scenes have been eliminated. These include personal reflections from the onscreen guide Curt Meine, scientific details about the role of fire in the southwest, and several interview soundbites. These provide back story about characters or events but are not critical to the viewer's understanding of Leopold's life and work."

Reviews"This beautiful, moving, and inspiring film reminds us that the man we most remember for the land ethic was also a father of wilderness protection, ecological restoration, and our whole consciousness about what he called our hardest task - the ability to live on a piece of land without spoiling it."

"Green Fire clarifies the enormous debt we owe Leopold. It beautifully reveals his lasting contributions to environmentalism and, in Leopold's spirit, challenges us to see the preciousness and interconnectedness of all life."

"Green Fire...should be mandatory viewing for any student in a natural resource field, indeed for anyone who values nature, wilderness, and wildlife...This film is a fine tribute to Leopold's legacy...Green Fire will contribute to people's appreciation of this amazing man and his role in the history of the conservation movement."

Dr. Michael Hutchins, Executive Director/CEO, The Wildlife Society

"I love this film. I have used it with my students and they love it too. The story never flags, and it is a great story indeed."

James Gustave Speth, Professor of Law, Vermont Law School, Author, America the Possible: Manifesto for a New Economy

"I'm a long-time fan of Aldo Leopold's words, but Green Fire contains a lot of new material to me about the man, his biography, and his place in environmental history. For a course, the film would be fabulous when used in conjunction with Leopold's writings, because it whets the appetite for the words by providing wonderful personal background for students."

"Aldo Leopold was the most important American environmental thinker of the 20th century, and Green Fire is a radiant portrait of Leopold's life and work. But its more important accomplishment is to suggest that Leopold may just be the most important environmental thinker for the 21st century as well."

Paul S. Sutter, Associate Professor of History, University of Colorado-Boulder, Author, Driven Wild: How the Fight against Automobiles Launched the Modern Wilderness Movement

"Comprehensive, visually compelling and well researched. This is a very 'teachable' film and I look forward to using it in my classes. We see how Leopold catalyzed an advocacy that, today, is leading groups around the world to work for the reintroduction of wolves, sand hill cranes, and other threatened species in places where they were once nearly extinct. We see people reconnecting themselves to practices that are restoring health to agricultural soils and regional watersheds. Green Fire offers tangible evidence that there may still be hope for the achievement of Leopold's most cherished dream-humans might 'evolve' and prove they are capable of living without destroying the land that sustains them."

"A compelling documentary...A thoughtful presentation of one man's profound and influential realization of the earth as an organism made up of the interrelationships between land, water, plants, animals and people. Leopold's work as a pioneer of wilderness preservation, game management, and environmental philosophy is developed at a lively pace through captivating historical footage and interviews with family members and a variety of scholars. Leopold's ultimate conclusion, that people can live on the earth without spoiling it, is revealed to be an empowering possibility rather than an empty platitude."

"As a long-time admirer of Aldo Leopold and someone who has taught The Sand County Almanac, I have been looking forward eagerly to seeing Green Fire...I'm happy to say, I was not disappointed!...I hope similar presentations of the film can be made at schools and colleges and to groups around Iowa and the U.S."

Robert F. Sayre, Professor Emeritus of English, University of Iowa, Author, Fire Island Past, Present, and Future: The Environmental History of a Barrier Beach

"It takes viewers to the places that inspired, transformed, and nudged the author's doctrine into something that ties the concept of a land ethic to each of us. And into something that still offers hope and invites action."

Pamela Biery, Sierra Club

"Aldo Leopold is venerated as the father of ecology. But how did Leopold develop his philosophy of a 'land ethic?' To find out, this excellent film, Green Fire , takes us on a journey from Aldo Leopold's boyhood observations of the natural world to domination of that world in his position as a forester to a new and revolutionary appreciation of the interconnectedness of all living things - Leopold's 'Land Ethic'."

Polly Walker, MD, MPH, Senior Fellow, The Center for a Livable Future, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

"A beautiful film. That word really sums it up: beautiful. Not only for the gorgeous on-site places where Green Fire was filmed, but even more so for the content of Aldo Leopold's message of a land ethic that comes across so well here. And while the film takes us back to Leopold's time and career in the early Twentieth Century, with excellent interviews of historians and other scholars who have studied his work in depth, the message that his land ethic ideals are for OUR time, now, rings clear. Nothing could be more true, and nothing could be better emphasized."

Dr. Sterling Evans, Professor and Chair of History, University of Oklahoma, Author, Bound in Twine: The History and Ecology of the Henequen-Wheat Complex for Mexico and the American and Canadian Plains

"Nicely crafted. It weaves together several story lines from scholars and family members, with a series of Leopold's personal revelations...The research and production values that went into the film are first-rate, and the insights well worth a viewing."

Craig Miller, KQED News

"I recommend it without reservation...Watching the film, it becomes clear how history can produce, in a kind of forge of events, the human beings that, literally, change the way we see the world."

Hal Herring, Field and Stream

"Highly recommended, especially for public and college library DVD collections."

"Excellent...In natural and social science classes, the Green Fire DVD can serve as an excellent resource for considering the complex nature of ecosystems and the development of sustainable practices. In social studies classes and in community use, it will be a fine resource for considering the importance and development of informed environmental protection and policy."